Roster controversy deprives Korea of first full-time baseball team manager

November 14, 2018

SEOUL, Nov. 14 (Yonhap) — Pitching legend Sun Dong-yol’s stint as South Korea’s first full-time national team manager has come to a abrupt end amid controversy over his Asian Games roster selection.

Sun, who was appointed South Korea’s first full-time manager for the national baseball team in July 2017, announced his resignation Wednesday. Sun was contracted until Tokyo 2020, should South Korea qualify for the Olympic Games, but he was only able to stay with the national team for 16 months.

When Sun took the helm, South Korea had big expectations for him because, unlike past managers, he was hired to run the national team full-time with no obligation to a Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) club.

Previously, the KBO had named a new manager for each different competition. Managers of KBO clubs, often the reigning league champions, took on the role.

South Korean national baseball team manager Sun Dong-yol speaks at a press conference at the Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) headquarters in Seoul on Nov. 14, 2018. (Yonhap)

A legendary pitcher in the KBO who amassed 146 wins, 40 losses and 132 saves with a 1.20 ERA as a player, Sun also had an impressive coaching career before accepting the top job.

Sun led the Samsung Lions to become Korean Series champions in 2005 and 2006. He also served as a pitching coach for the national team at the 2006 World Baseball Classic, the 2015 Premier 12 and the 2017 World Baseball Classic.

In his first press conference, Sun said he had set his sights on the Tokyo Olympics. He made a fine start with the national team, taking a runner-up finish at the Asia Professional Baseball Championship (APBC) — a tournament also featuring Japan and Chinese Taipei that was open only to players under 24 — in November 2017.

But fans started to their back on Sun during the 18th Asian Games in Indonesia.

Even after South Korea won its third straight Asian Games gold medal in Jakarta on Sept. 1, Sun faced heat for selecting players that many thought were undeserving of national team spots.

This file photo taken Aug. 28, 2018, shows South Korea’s national baseball team manager Sun Dong-yol watching a game between South Korea and Hong Kong at the 18th Asian Games at Gelora Bung Karno Baseball Stadium in Jakarta. (Yonhap)

Healthy South Korean men are required to serve about two years in the military, but athletes who win an Asian Games gold medal are exempt. Critics said the manager picked certain players just to help them get their military exemptions, since South Korea, as the only fully professional team at the Asian Games, was virtually guaranteed to win the gold medal.

In particular, Oh Ji-hwan, shortstop for KBO club LG Twins, became a lightning rod for criticism, as he was leading the league in errors and strikeouts at the start of the Asian Games.

The controversy caused Sun to be summoned to a parliamentary audit session last month where he was grilled by lawmakers about the Asian Games roster selection.

Sun was also subject to investigation by the Anti-Corruption and Civil Rights Commission after a civic group filed a report claiming that the manager violated the anti-graft law by picking underperforming players. He was later cleared of these allegations.

This file photo taken Sept. 3, 2018, shows South Korea’s national baseball team manager Sun Dong-yol (L, front) welcomed by Korea Baseball Organization (KBO) Commissioner Chung Un-chan at Incheon International Airport in Incheon after returning home from the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta. (Yonhap)

At the parliamentary audit, Sun denied any wrongdoing while assembling the national team, adding that he never considered players’ military service status.

However, Sun did apologize for failing to properly gauge public sentiment regarding the athletes’ and their military exemptions.

At the press conference explaining his resignation, Sun said he felt “miserable” when his team got no warm reception at home, even though they were returning with the Asian Games title. Sun added that harsh comments by one lawmaker at the audit also pushed him to step down from his post.

Sun apparently received no support from KBO Commissioner Chung Un-chan, either.

Chung, who was also called in as a witness by lawmakers, said at a parliamentary audit that he thinks there’s no need for a full-time manager unless there are a lot of international competitions.

Chung also criticized Sun for scouting players for the Asian Games by watching KBO games on television instead of going to ballparks, saying that those actions were “no different than an economist who only studies data and numbers without going out to inspect markets.”

This file photo taken Oct. 10, 2018, shows South Korean national baseball team manager Sun Dong-yol (C) at a parliamentary audit session in Seoul. (Yonhap)

Chung later met with Sun and explained what he meant at the audit, but it was apparently too late to reverse Sun’s decision.

Sun didn’t reveal his future plans after quitting the national team. But in a statement to media, he hinted at staying in the baseball industry, saying, “My passion for baseball will not change.”

The KBO, which revealed that it had not expected Sun’s departure, is now tasked with finding a new manager.

South Korea’s next big event is the 2019 Premier 12, which will double as a qualifying event for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.